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Second World War, and specifically whether
regional geography was an atheoreticalgeog-
raphy (see Holmen, 1995). For now, debate
seems to have settled down. ghe
Suggested reading
Gregory (1982); Grigg (1965); Hart (1982);
Pudup (1988).
regional alliance An agreement between a
group of neighbouring political units facili-
tating cross-borderco-operation. The term
is particularly identified withsecurityco-
operation betweenstates. NATO is the stron-
gest such alliance, with the commitment that
an attack on any one of the member states by
an external aggressor is deemed as an attack
against all of them. During thecold war, the
USA (NATO, SEATO, CENTO) and the
Soviet Union (Warsaw Pact) created rival
regional alliances. Since the terrorist attacks
of 11 September 2001 (seeterrorism), the
USA has attempted to forge alliances with
many countries, but none of the recent efforts
have the intensity and breadth of the Cold War
era. Post-Cold War changes and the break-up
of the Soviet Union have catalysed new
regional initiatives to facilitatetradeand eco-
nomicdevelopment(Pinnick, 2005) as states
balance the promotion of economic inter-
action with cross-border security concerns,
and manage security concerns no longer
viewed as part of the Cold War conflict
(McNulty, 1999). The increased pressure
upon localities to be attractive to global
investmenthas also fostered local regional
alliances to build transport and other forms
of economicinfrastructurethat can not only
enhance economic growth but also facilitate
peace across international borders (Newman,
2005). The current geopolitical context shows
that regional security alliances are in flux as
NATO expands its border eastwards to
include former Warsaw Pact members (Oas,
2005), but at the same time the European
Union builds its own security apparatus that
at the moment is deemed to complement
NATO, but could succeed it. cf
regional cycles Fluctuations or cyclical
waves in the level of a variable in aregion.
Techniques andmodelsfor analysing regional
cycles have been applied to both regional eco-
nomic activity and toepidemicsand the mod-
elling ofdisease. Cycles in economic activity,
usually measured by industrial output or
unemployment rates, can be very long-term,
as withkondratieff cycles, or shorter-term,
reflecting both seasonal variations in the
demand for labour and the regional impact of
national business cycles of expansion and
recession. Some descriptive studies of regional
cycles were undertaken in the early years of
regional science, but more recent work has
focused on modelling the cycles. Economists
have built regional (e.g. the State of California)
and multi-regional (e.g. all the regions of
France) econometric models. These relate
macroeconomic variables of output, expend-
iture and employment at the regional level to
each other, and to national economic and policy
variables. Such models now exist for many
countries and regions. A second approach,
mainly by geographers, has studied the spatial
diffusionof regional cycles, tracing the timing
and cyclical amplitude for different cities and
regions. lwh
Suggested reading
Glickman (1997); King and Clark (1978).
regional geography The study of the vari-
able character of places in the world, usually
with an emphasis on theirhuman geography.
Knowledge of world regional geography is
often seen as essential to general education
and a specifically ‘geographical literacy’,
which is why it forms a mainstay of introduc-
tory survey courses in many universities.
Critics frequently complain that such courses
are little more than a fact-driven whirlwind
tour, but regional geography has a long intel-
lectual history and, like the larger discipline,
its role, objectives and methods have changed
over time. The authors of the better textbooks
are very well aware of these considerations,
and sensitive to the pedagogical possibilities
they allow and the responsibilities they impose
(e.g. Bradshaw, Dymond, White and Chacko,
2005; de Blij and Muller, 2007).
Regional geography is usually traced back to
Strabo’s conception ofchorologyas the dis-
ciplined description of the parts of the Earth.
As late as the seventeenth century, this con-
tinued to provide the model for what in early
modern Europe was calledSpecial Geography,
founded – as Bernard Varenius (1622–50) put
it – ‘upon the experience and observations of
those who have described the several coun-
tries’. Studies such as these may have contrib-
uted to a privileged, civic education, but they
had larger purposes too. Just as Strabo’s
chorography informed the administration of
the Roman Empire, so did Varenius recognize
that Special Geography had a particular sig-
nificance for both ‘statecraft’ and the world-
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REGIONAL ALLIANCE